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gawk
Once upon a time, computer makers wrote software that worked only in English. Eventually, hardware and software vendors noticed that if their systems worked in the native languages of non-English-speaking countries, they were able to sell more systems. As a result, internationalization and localization of programs and software systems became a common practice.
For many years, the ability to provide internationalization
was largely restricted to programs written in C and C++.
This chapter describes the underlying library gawk
uses for internationalization, as well as how
gawk
makes internationalization
features available at the awk
program level.
Having internationalization available at the awk
level
gives software developers additional flexibility—they are no
longer forced to write in C or C++ when internationalization is
a requirement.
• I18N and L10N: | Internationalization and Localization. | |
• Explaining gettext: | How GNU gettext works.
| |
• Programmer i18n: | Features for the programmer. | |
• Translator i18n: | Features for the translator. | |
• I18N Example: | A simple i18n example. | |
• Gawk I18N: | gawk is also internationalized.
| |
• I18N Summary: | Summary of I18N stuff. |